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Courts Are Neither Feminist Nor Anti-Father: Kerala High Court Says Child Custody Not Based On Gender Of Parent But On Child’s Best Interests

Child Custody : Courts Are Not Feminist: Kerala HC

Child Custody : Courts Are Not Feminist: Kerala HC

The Kerala High Court ruled that child custody decisions must focus only on the child’s best interests, not the gender of the parent. The Court stressed that children need equal emotional and physical support from both parents.

KOCHI: The Kerala High Court has clearly stated that child custody disputes should never be decided based on whether the parent is a mother or a father. The Court held that children involved in matrimonial custody cases need the presence, care, and support of both parents for their proper mental and physical development and for growing up as responsible citizens of society.

The observation came from a vacation bench comprising Justice Devan Ramachandran and Justice P. Krishna Kumar, which was hearing a batch of petitions challenging custody arrangements of minor children between parents.

Justice Devan Ramachandran, while leading the bench, emphasized that children cannot be treated as trophies in legal battles between parents. He pointed out that in the rush to win custody cases, parents often forget the basic truth that children have an equal right to the love and presence of both their mother and father.

The Court strongly remarked,

“In fight for custody of children, parents forget that children have the right to be with both of them equally…Courts are neither Feminist or masculinist, nor will we tolerate patriarchism. We will enforce judicial orders with constitutional will”

The bench further explained that courts are unfairly labelled depending on which parent gets custody. Addressing this growing narrative, the Court observed:

“If a court is to grant custody to a mother, they would brand it feminist and if it should give to the father, then it is accused to be anti-woman. Every case has different facts and circumstances which cannot be compared with each other. Courts will have to analyze them on a case to case basis and take decisions, fundamentally keeping the best interests of the child in mind. Rumours are spread by interested persons, occasionally even by lawyers, whose intentions are malafide and without knowing the facts involved.”

The High Court underlined that parents must always remain parents first, even if their marriage has failed. Continuous conflict between them directly affects the child’s emotional health and may make the child intolerant and disturbed in the future.

Highlighting the correct approach to custody matters, the Court added:

“In matters of custody, the choice should not be as to which parent, but to ensure that the children are able to spend maximum time with each of them. But, this most important requirement is often lost in the heat and din of litigation, mostly fueled by ego and anger.”

Before ending the proceedings, the bench made a deeply emotional observation reflecting concern for children trapped in parental conflicts, stating:

“Where has humanism gone? It deeply pains us to see children crying caught between the strife of their parents for no reason they understand.”

The Bench observed that when there is no indication that the child’s welfare is in danger, continued litigation only prolongs conflict and does not serve the child’s interest. In such circumstances, the Court found that the appropriate course for the petitioner was to withdraw the proceedings rather than continue with adversarial litigation.

Accordingly, the Kerala High Court accepted the request of the petitioner and dismissed the original petition as withdrawn, while reiterating that the child’s welfare remained protected under the existing custody arrangement.

Courts Are Neither Feminist Nor Anti-Father: Kerala High Court Says Child Custody Not Based On Gender Of Parent But On Child's Best Interests

Explanatory Table: Laws / Legal Principles Referred

Law / PrincipleExplanationHow Applied in This Case
Best Interests of the Child (Paramount Consideration)A settled principle in custody jurisprudence that the child’s welfare overrides parental rights, ego, or genderThe Court held that custody decisions must focus only on the child’s mental, emotional, and physical well-being
Constitutional EqualityCourts must act without gender bias and enforce equality before lawThe bench rejected labels like “feminist” or “anti-woman” and stressed gender neutrality
Parens Patriae JurisdictionCourts act as guardians of minors when deciding custodyThe Court intervened to protect children from parental conflict and litigation-driven harm
Right of Child to Parental CareA child has a right to love, care, and presence of both parentsThe Court stressed maximum involvement of both parents rather than exclusive custody
Judicial Discipline & Case-by-Case AnalysisEach custody case depends on its own factsThe Court rejected comparisons and generalisations across custody cases

Case Summary

Key Takeaways

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